Dinosaur Footprints

Dinosaur footprints create an apparent dilemma for creationists. How could they ever be made and fossilized during the Flood? Conventional geologists also face a dilemma. If geologic change takes place slowly, surely footprints made in mud would be obliterated by wind and rain.

Millions of dinosaur tracks have been discovered in sedimentary rocks all over the world. At first glance, it seems difficult to explain the formation of dinosaur tracks during the Flood. A closer inspection of the details, however, demonstrates that the Flood is a reasonable explanation.

Lark Quarry in Queensland is home to the only known fossil record of a dinosaur stampede. There, preserved in mid-Cretaceous rock, are about 3,300 individual tracks representing about 150 dinosaurs of varying sizes and kinds.